First stop! Salt Mountain! It's what it sounds like. It's a big pile of salt. I heard that it used to be whiter. It's kind of a kitchy idea for a tourist attraction, but it is fun to visit because you get a nice view of the area. It's near the coast to the northwest of central Tainan.

The area has historically been a major salt producing area, and they still have salt fields, so going up on the salt pile let's you see them nicely.

This is all salt. I'm not sure what they do when it rains...
Big poncho?

Salt fields stretch out into the distance. They actually look a lot like rice fields. They break up the salt fields into sections because it's easier to control the evaporation process if you have a series of small pools rather than one big one. (As for rice, I think they break the fields up to control the water level better.)

建物の向こう側は全部塩田だ。下に有る小さい電車は塩山と塩博物館を繋げる。

まだ水が沢山入っている塩田だ。

...and in case your ungrateful, bratty kids get bored of the salt, and the history of salt, you can take them down to the go-kart track and kill a couple minutes.

White dog, white salt.

なんか、日本の簡略された「塩」の字は元々のやつと全然違う。ここまで異なる字は少ないと思う。「皿」だけが一緒だ。

Brace yourselves. This next section is truly incredible. You thought you knew salt, but you didn't know anything. Salt is more wonderful than you would ever have believed. With the proper talent salt can even be:

To get the water from one salt field to another, higher one, people used to use these devices. As you can see, it's powered by one's feet, so it must have been awful out in the blazing sun. They used them until surprisingly recently. There were some photos in the Salt Museum from the 50's, with women wearing long, flower pattern dresses like women wore in the 50's while they worked these machines. These were later replaced by windmills and then by diesel or electric motors.

塩を運んだ汽車だ。日本製でもある。日本時代に日本帝国は積極的に七股の塩業を勧めた。

They used to have small, narrow gauge railways that transported the salt from the Cigu area to the main train line down the west coast of Taiwan.

I don't really have any photos from inside the salt museum, but this statue is just outside it. It's the mascot characters of the museum.

And here they are showing us to the toilet! What's the male one up to? I don't know if I like that sly look on his face...

There was nowhere high enough for me to get a good photo, but someone has arranged this field so that it reads:

福

BLESSING フク

You can see the "ng" at the end of "blessing" in this photo.

「福」の漢字の「田」も見えるね。

Mostly done salt field.

盗られちゃった！俺の塩は！しかも、なんでわざとちょっと残した！？

猫連れの娘。
A young girl and her very patient, very cooperative cat.

After visiting the museum, then missing the bus, then visiting the salt fields next to the museum, then waiting in the hot sun for half an hour so that I definitely wouldn't miss the next bus, then taking the bus down back to Tainan, I visited "Eternal Golden Fortress". It's an impressively named fort that was built by the Qing to help repel naval invasions of the Tainan coast. It was built in 1874, near the end of the Qing control of Taiwan, around the time when they finally started to care about the island a little bit. It saw some action in the war with Japan, but then the Japanese took over Taiwan and the fort was disarmed.

If you were a soldier in Qing Era Taiwan, you might have been training in the blazing sun in this courtyard.

The fort is mostly a square, but at each corner of the square, it has a section that sticks out like this.

ラブラブのカップル。俺は邪魔して彼等が立っているところまで行って写真を撮った。ご免！

邪魔者の写真。

I just missed these guys. As I was walking through the front entrance of the fort, I heard some loud banging noises. While I was walking around the wall, I saw these guys walking to the entrance. I assume they must have been firing off some Qing Era guns at one corner of the fort.

清朝時代に砦に有った大砲は外国から輸入された物とたしか書いて有ったと思う。イギリス製だったっけ？

I saw some people doing hilarious "Woah! I'm standing in front of the cannon! I'm gonna get shot!" photos as I walked around the wall. Watching them take the photos was hilarious for me too until I saw it for the 8th time. I understand though. I probably would have done the same if I had been with other people.